No, it is not. It is an adjective form of the noun wind. The adverb form (windily) is rarely used.
No.It is a noun: 'That is a cold wind today!' (rhymes with finned)Or a verb: 'I have to wind my watch.' (rhymes with find)The adjective for the noun is windy, adverb is windily. The wind in the trees ruffled the leaves. [noun]The verb wind meaning to turn or twist, does not have an adverb form.
An antonym for windy might be calm.
"Windy" can refer to two different parts of speech. As an adjective, it describes something that is characterized by wind. As a verb, "windy" can be used to describe the act of twisting or turning, as in "windy roads."
"Windy" and "calm" are antonyms. "Windy" refers to a condition with a lot of air moving while "calm" refers to a lack of movement or agitation.
The term 'windy day' can be used as a compound noun. The word 'day' is a noun, the word 'windy' is an adjective describing the noun day.
no
it means it is windy just windy
No.It is a noun: 'That is a cold wind today!' (rhymes with finned)Or a verb: 'I have to wind my watch.' (rhymes with find)The adjective for the noun is windy, adverb is windily. The wind in the trees ruffled the leaves. [noun]The verb wind meaning to turn or twist, does not have an adverb form.
Windy, it is windy, Hace viento in Spanish.
It is very windy outside today.Scotland is a bit windy.
Yes - It can either be pronounced windy - as in 'The weather was more windy today', or windy as in 'The road was more windy than he expected'
windy windy
An antonym for windy might be calm.
"Windy" can refer to two different parts of speech. As an adjective, it describes something that is characterized by wind. As a verb, "windy" can be used to describe the act of twisting or turning, as in "windy roads."
Yes, very windy.
windy=breezy
It depends, but it is windy at times.